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115 lines
6.6 KiB
Text
[[transactions]]
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=== Transaction overview
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TIP: A {apm-overview-ref-70}/transactions.html[transaction] describes an event captured by an Elastic APM agent instrumenting a service.
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The APM agents automatically collect performance metrics on HTTP requests, database queries, and much more.
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Selecting a <<services,*service*>> brings you to the *transactions* overview.
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The *time spent by span type*, *transaction duration* and *requests per minute* chart display information on all transactions associated with the selected service.
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The *Transactions* table, however, provides only a list of _transaction groups_ for the selected service.
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In other words, this view groups all transactions of the same name together, and only displays one transaction for each group.
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[role="screenshot"]
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image::apm/images/apm-transactions-overview.png[Example view of transactions table in the APM UI in Kibana]
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*Time spent by span type* -- beta[] Certain agents support breakdown graphs in the APM UI.
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This graph is an easy way to visualize where your application is spending most of its time.
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For example, is your app spending time in external calls, database processing, or application code execution?
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The time a transaction took to complete is also recorded and displayed on the chart under the "app" label.
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"app" indicates that something was happening within the application, but we're not sure exactly what.
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This could be a sign that the agent does not have auto-instrumentation for whatever was happening during that time.
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It's important to note that if you have asynchronous spans, the sum of all span times may exceed the duration of the transaction.
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TIP: If the *Time spent by span type* chart is missing in the APM UI, it means your agent does not support this feature yet.
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*Transaction duration* shows the response times for this service and is broken down into average, 95th, and 99th percentile.
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If there's a weird spike that you'd like to investigate,
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you can simply zoom in on the graph - this will adjust the specific time range,
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and all of the data on the page will update accordingly.
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*Requests per minute* is divided into response codes: 2xx, 3xx, 4xx, etc.,
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and is useful for determining if you're serving more of one code than you typically do.
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Like in the Transaction duration graph, you can zoom in on anomalies to further investigate them.
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The *Transactions* table is similar to the <<traces,traces>> overview and shows the name of each transaction occurring in the selected service.
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Transactions with the same name are grouped together and only shown once in this table.
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By default, transaction groups are sorted by _Impact_.
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Impact helps show the most used and slowest endpoints in your service - in other words,
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it's the collective amount of pain a specific endpoint is causing your users.
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If there's a particular endpoint you're worried about, you can click on it to view the <<transaction-details, transaction details>>.
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[IMPORTANT]
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====
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The transaction overview will only display helpful information when the transactions in your service are named correctly.
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Elastic APM Agents come with built-in support for popular frameworks out-of-the-box.
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However, if you only see one route in the Transaction overview page, or if you have transactions named "unknown route",
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it could be a symptom that the agent either wasn't installed correctly or doesn't support your framework.
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For further details, including troubleshooting and custom implementation instructions,
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refer to the documentation for each {apm-agents-ref}[APM Agent] you've implemented.
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====
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[[rum-transaction-overview]]
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==== RUM Transaction overview
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The transaction overview page is customized for the JavaScript RUM Agent.
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This page highlights things like *page load times*, *transactions per minute*, and even the *average page load duration distribution by country*.
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[role="screenshot"]
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image::apm/images/apm-geo-ui.jpg[average page load duration distribution]
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This data is available due to the geo-ip and user agent pipelines being enabled by default,
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which allows for the capture of geo-location and user agent data.
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These visualizations make it easy for you to visualize performance information about your
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end users' experience based on their location.
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[[transaction-details]]
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==== Transaction details
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Selecting a transaction group will bring you to the *transaction* details.
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Transaction details include a high-level overview of the time spent by span type,
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transaction group duration, requests per minute, and transaction group duration distribution.
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It's important to note that all of these graphs show data from every transaction within the selected transaction group.
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[role="screenshot"]
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image::apm/images/apm-transaction-response-dist.png[Example view of response time distribution]
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A single sampled transaction is also displayed.
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This sampled transaction is based on your selection in the *Transactions duration distribution*.
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You can update the sampled transaction by selecting a new _bucket_ in the transactions duration distribution graph.
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The number of requests per bucket is displayed when hovering over the graph, and the selected bucket is highlighted to stand out.
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[role="screenshot"]
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image::apm/images/apm-transaction-duration-dist.png[Example view of transactions duration distribution graph]
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Most of the requests fall into buckets on the left side of the graph,
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with a long tail of smaller buckets to the right.
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This is a typical distribution, and indicates most of our requests were served quickly - awesome!
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It's the requests on the right, the ones taking longer than average, that we probably want to focus on.
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By clicking on these buckets,
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we're presented with a span timeline waterfall showing what a typical request in that bucket was doing.
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By investigating this timeline waterfall, we can hopefully see why it was slow and then implement a fix.
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[role="screenshot"]
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image::apm/images/apm-transaction-sample.png[Example view of transactions sample]
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NOTE: More information on timeline waterfalls is available in <<spans, spans>>.
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For a particular transaction sample, we can get even more information in the *metadata* tab:
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* Labels - Custom labels added by agents
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* HTTP request/response information
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* Host information
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* Container information
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* Service - The service/application runtime, agent, name, etc..
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* Process - The process id that served up the request.
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* Agent information
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* URL
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* User - Requires additional configuration, but allows you to see which user experienced the current transaction.
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* Custom - You can configure your agent to add custom contextual information on transactions.
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TIP: All of this data is stored in documents in Elasticsearch.
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This means you can select "Actions - View sample document" to see the actual Elasticsearch document under the discover tab.
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